David Bowie Left Half His Fortune to Iman and Wants His Ashes Scattered in Bali

David Bowie’s will was filed on Friday in Manhattan’s Surrogate’s Court, according to the New York Times. Twenty pages long, the will disperses Bowie’s $100 million fortune among his family and a couple of employees, and contains some very Bowie-esque directives for his ashes.

Bowie, a longtime Buddhist, “was so taken with Bali,” the Times reports, “that he had an Indonesian-style refuge built on Mustique, in the Caribbean,” and requested that his body be shipped to Bali, and “cremated there in accordance with the Buddhist rituals.” “If that is not practical,” Bowie noted in his will, which was prepared in 2004, “then I direct that my executors shall arrange for my remains to be cremated and my ashes scattered in Bali.” According to Bowie’s death certificate, his body was cremated in New Jersey earlier this month.

Bowie’s wife, Iman, will receive half of his fortune, as well as the apartment the two shared in Manhattan’s SoHo. A pair of New York lawyers will pay Iman from a trust four times a year, but she can ask for additional funds to support her “health, education and maintenance,” reports Page Six. Duncan Jones, Bowie’s 44-year-old son from a previous marriage to Mary Angela Barnett, gets 25 percent (about $25 million); his daughter with Iman, Alexandria Zahra Jones, will get the same, though through a trust, since she’s only 15. Lexi also inherited Bowie’s “mountain retreat” in upstate New York.

The rest of Bowie’s estate was divided up among two of his staffers: Duncan’s onetime nanny, Marion Skene, received $1 million, and Corinne “Coco” Schwab, Bowie’s longtime personal assistant (whom The Telegraph credits with “saving Bowie’s life,” a reference to his wild days during the 1970s), received $2 million. Schwab also inherited Bowie’s stock in a company called “Opossum Inc.,” which, in another deliciously Bowie-esque twist, is something of a mysterious entity. “It’s unclear what Opossum does,” writes Page Six, “and Bowie’s New York-based lawyer did not return a call seeking comment on the issue.”